Cooper Jennifer, Edwards Adrian, Williams Huw, Sheikh Aziz, Parry Gareth, Hibbert Peter, Butlin Amy, Donaldson Liam, Carson-Stevens Andrew
Primary Care Patient Safety (PISA) Research Group, Division of Population Medicine, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales.
Division of Population Medicine, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales.
Ann Fam Med. 2017 Sep;15(5):455-461. doi: 10.1370/afm.2123.
A culture of blame and fear of retribution are recognized barriers to reporting patient safety incidents. The extent of blame attribution in safety incident reports, which may reflect the underlying safety culture of health care systems, is unknown. This study set out to explore the nature of blame in family practice safety incident reports.
We characterized a random sample of family practice patient safety incident reports from the England and Wales National Reporting and Learning System. Reports were analyzed according to prespecified classification systems to describe the incident type, contributory factors, outcomes, and severity of harm. We developed a taxonomy of blame attribution, and we then used descriptive statistical analyses to identify the proportions of blame types and to explore associations between incident characteristics and one type of blame.
Health care professionals making family practice incident reports attributed blame to a person in 45% of cases (n = 975 of 2,148; 95% CI, 43%-47%). In 36% of cases, those who reported the incidents attributed fault to another person, whereas 2% of those reporting acknowledged personal responsibility. Blame was commonly associated with incidents where a complaint was anticipated.
The high frequency of blame in these safety, incident reports may reflect a health care culture that leads to blame and retribution, rather than to identifying areas for learning and improvement, and a failure to appreciate the contribution of system factors in others' behavior. Successful improvement in patient safety through the analysis of incident reports is unlikely without achieving a blame-free culture.
指责文化以及对报复的恐惧被认为是报告患者安全事件的障碍。安全事件报告中的指责归因程度尚不清楚,而这可能反映了医疗保健系统潜在的安全文化。本研究旨在探讨家庭医疗安全事件报告中指责的性质。
我们对来自英格兰和威尔士国家报告与学习系统的家庭医疗患者安全事件报告进行了随机抽样分析。根据预先指定的分类系统对报告进行分析,以描述事件类型、促成因素、结果和伤害严重程度。我们制定了指责归因分类法,然后使用描述性统计分析来确定指责类型的比例,并探讨事件特征与一种指责类型之间的关联。
在家庭医疗事件报告中,医疗保健专业人员在45%的案例中(2148例中的975例;95%置信区间,43%-47%)将责任归咎于某个人。在36%的案例中,报告事件的人将过错归咎于他人,而报告者中有2%承认个人责任。指责通常与预期会有投诉的事件相关。
这些安全事件报告中频繁出现指责,可能反映出一种导致指责和报复而非确定学习和改进领域的医疗保健文化,以及未能认识到系统因素对他人行为的影响。如果不能营造无指责文化,通过分析事件报告来成功改善患者安全是不太可能的。